While Baden's definition is sort of fitting for some discussion, it is rather first person. It is about how one becomes happy, not how one makes others happy. — Sir2u
we think what it is is all too obvious, see S, or it may be that the concept has been hijacked and degraded by the bulldozer of (post)modern culture to the extent that it has become indistinguishable to us from pleasure, see @Sir2u. Or both. Or I may be deluded. — Baden
originality in identity and character in a way that fosters same in others; consistent quality in thought and action. — Amity
Could you please give us a workable definition of "shmancy", I cannot find it anywhere. And I know that you really like to provide people with the definition of words that are not in common use. Where can I find that dictionary you use?
7 hours ago — Sir2u
We can have our cake and eat it too! It can be partly exploratory, and partly a thesis — Purple Pond
We can have our cake and eat it too! It can be partly exploratory, and partly a thesis. I mean we can make conclusions on what we know about happiness, and leave some wiggle room for some exploratory content, for example, the part of happiness that we are not sure about. — Purple Pond
This may be because we think what it is is all too obvious, see S, or it may be that the concept has been hijacked and degraded by the bulldozer of (post)modern culture to the extent that it has become indistinguishable to us from pleasure, see @Sir2u. Or both. Or I may be deluded.
a day ago — Baden
Hi again. Just wondering about the different theories along the 'What is Happiness' spectrum.
I am not sure whether the views above are at opposite ends. And yours is the middle way? — Amity
I really don't know about the (post) modern culture - is there a specific philosopher I can read about? — Amity
I can't lay claim to the middle way...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middle_Way — Baden
That is closer to my original idea about what makes people happy than trying to find better ways to explain what exactly happiness is. We know already, thanks to "S", the definition of happiness so lets look at the good and bad of making people happy.
Example:
Is it correct(moral) to give a 16 year old a shotgun for his/her birthday if it makes her/him happy? — Sir2u
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Given the interest in the ethical and meaningful aspects of Happiness, together with the posters' definitions, here are a few thoughts about a thesis or statement. — Amity
Of the examples you've provided, I can't see myself getting behind any of them. Maybe if you give me enough time I can think of a thesis statement worth arguing for. Until then, anybody else can jump in. — Purple Pond
Who is this 'us' ? You mean yourself as in acting a bit of a schmuck. — Amity
Shmancy works just fine in context. — Amity
If you had to give a definition or clarification on your theory of Happiness what might it be ? — Amity
...the part of happiness that we are not sure about. — Purple Pond
First of all it is customary around here to provide ones usage, definition, of words that are not necessarily standard. I have not found Shmancy in any of the philosophy books I have read so I asked for it to be explained. — Sir2u
Second, calling someone a schmuck is not an example of Shm-reduplication, it is an insult.
schmuck - (Yiddish) a stupid, foolish or annoying person
Which would probably be more applicable to a person that uses "fancy schmancy" in what is supposed to be a serious discussion. — Sir2u
Who the hell knows what happiness is... — Sir2u
It's the lounge, and it's okay if it's not a hundred percent serious. :up: — Purple Pond
I rest my case. — S
I am a professor in shmanciology. If you would like to learn more about it, I invite you to attend one of my upcoming lectures on the shmubject. There will of course be a shmall fee: shmomewhere in the ballpark of between £10,000 and £15,000. — S
Exhibit A:
Exhibit B:
I rest my case. — S
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